I tried installing Peppermint OS on an old Lenovo Thinkpad X130e, AMD E450 APU, 4GB RAM & 250GB HDD. But failed. Did this not suitable for AMD processor. i5 is pretty perfect for Windows 10. I am using it with 4GB & SSD. Please make a video on Linux distros for older CPUs like AMD E450, Core2Duo etc.
I would recommend Artix MATE. It's an Arch-based distro, without fat systemd, fast and powerful. I also recommend Xubuntu 18.04 - this outdated version of Ubuntu is still supported by Canonical. Popular software like Google Chrome is working too. Maybe not for everyone, but still great - the Void linux. There are 2 versions of it : glibc for standard cases and musl for enthusiasts. Musl is extremely fast, although you should know, that not every package will be working. Chrome not. In conclusion, don't forget about classical Debian. Yes, it's not a bad choice for slow machines. Just consider a lightweight DE like LXDE.
1:16 Linux Lite
2:05 Bodhi Linux
2:49 Bunsenlabs Linux
3:33 Q4OS
4:24 Xubuntu
is antix and mx deservs a place .
no antix, peppermint or tinycore linux?
So do any of these support 32 bit CPU's? Lots of netbooks out there that could still be useful for light Internet browsing, email etc.
ruclips.net/video/z8qZjLLKKGM/видео.html
I finally installed Linux Lite
yes Bodhi and Q4OS have a 32 bit version
What about GeckoLinux estatic barebone...?
✌🏽
The best of the best is Loc-Os based in Debian.
elive nor alpine ?
There is also Lubuntu.
Sorry, lubuntu based on ubuntu discontinued 32bit os support
I tried installing Peppermint OS on an old Lenovo Thinkpad X130e, AMD E450 APU, 4GB RAM & 250GB HDD. But failed. Did this not suitable for AMD processor. i5 is pretty perfect for Windows 10. I am using it with 4GB & SSD. Please make a video on Linux distros for older CPUs like AMD E450, Core2Duo etc.
Good man 👍!
good list overall but I couldn't finish with that voiceover
I like linux mint xfce more than linux lite
I would recommend Artix MATE. It's an Arch-based distro, without fat systemd, fast and powerful.
I also recommend Xubuntu 18.04 - this outdated version of Ubuntu is still supported by Canonical. Popular software like Google Chrome is working too.
Maybe not for everyone, but still great - the Void linux. There are 2 versions of it : glibc for standard cases and musl for enthusiasts. Musl is extremely fast, although you should know, that not every package will be working. Chrome not.
In conclusion, don't forget about classical Debian. Yes, it's not a bad choice for slow machines. Just consider a lightweight DE like LXDE.
ohh german man (Einstellungen read this )